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We don’t have to accept this attack on our living standards, we don’t have to accept the demonisation of the various minorities, be they disabled, poor, single parents, immigrants or refugees.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 April 2023

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Summary

I knew I was transgender from about the age of four, even though the word did not exist then. I knew I was a girl, even though I had a boy’s body. There was no internet back then, no social media, no real medical knowledge. You couldn’t talk about how you felt, tell others you were really a girl, when everything about you said the opposite.

I wasn’t always an activist; it started when I became disabled. I saw the multiple cuts being made to disability benefits, the harm that these were causing, the deaths and suicides and the despair that so many were experiencing.

I was invited to be a speaker at a mass rally against austerity in Bristol. It’s quite scary if you have never spoken in public before, but I got through it okay and my speech was generally well received. I started a new branch of DPAC, Disabled People Against Cuts, as I felt it was time we did something to make our voices finally heard.

Since then life has never been the same. Our DPAC Bristol & South West branch has grown via social media, and we now have a real voice and a presence. I’ve been invited to speak at rallies and demonstrations all over the country, from an action to unseat the former Minister for Work and Pensions, Stephen Crabb, to supporting demos against NHS closures, and a panel to discuss the impact of austerity on social work.

Recently we held a demonstration in Bristol to highlight the introduction of Universal Credit and explain to people exactly what this means. We got soaked, but what does a little rain matter when you are an activist?

Little by little we are hopefully changing minds and opinions, and countering some of the lies spread by certain sections of the media. We are telling people there is a better way, that life doesn’t have to be as hard as it is today, that austerity is a deliberate ideological choice designed to punish the poor for the deliberate actions of the rich, particularly the bankers.

We don’t have to accept this attack on our living standards, we don’t have to accept the demonisation of the various minorities, be they disabled, poor, single parents, immigrants or refugees.

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Invisible Britain
Portraits of Hope and Resilience
, pp. 49 - 51
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2018

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